Former UN envoy Brahimi: Mideast could 'blow up' if Syria not checked

Lakhdar Brahimi, shown at a news conference on May 13, the day he resigned as U.N. and Arab League Special Envoy to Syria.

Lakhdar Brahimi, shown at a news conference on May 13, the day he resigned as U.N. and Arab League Special Envoy to Syria. (Associated Press)

Nabih Bulos

Lakhdar Brahimi: 'How much killing and destruction' before Syrian war ends?

The crisis in Syria, if left unchecked, poses grave risks to the entire Mideast, the former United Nations special envoy for Syria says.

Lakhdar Brahimi, who resigned last month, spoke in a no-holds-barred interview with the German magazine Der Spiegel, saying that "unless there is a real, sustained effort to work out a political solution, there is a serious risk that the region will blow up."

Syria is embroiled in a civil war pitting opposition rebels desperate to wrest control from forces loyal to President Bashar Assad. The fighting, which began as a series of largely peaceful uprisings that quickly turned violent, has killed 160,000 people and forced many to leave their homes to escape the violence.

In the interview, published over the weekend, Brahimi said he had hoped Assad would take on the role of kingmaker instead of staying on as president. But he said many underestimated Assad, who recently received 88.7% of the vote in a presidential election that was limited to government-held regions and which drew widespread international condemnation.

"But the thing is they thought that the regime was going to fall easily -- complete misconception. Syria has a state, it has an army, and it was assumed that it was going to fall just like Libya did," he said.

Syrian conflict

Joseph Eid / AFP/Getty Images

Syrian men walk near destroyed buildings in the city of Homs.

Syrian men walk near destroyed buildings in the city of Homs. (Joseph Eid / AFP/Getty Images)

Brahimi said military intervention to oust Assad would be "very, very dangerous," drawing a comparison to Iraq. But he said a U.N. peacekeeping force might eventually offer a solution.

"The Syrians would have to agree for the U.N. to come in," he said. "It doesn't look likely today or tomorrow, but this conflict has got to be resolved. And it will be at some point. The question is: How much killing and destruction are we going to have before that happens? People are telling me that [the Syrian city of] Homs looks like Berlin in 1945."